Sujet : Re: Famous Photo of Einstein in New York Parade Cropped to Deceive
De : ttt_heg (at) *nospam* web.de (Thomas Heger)
Groupes : sci.physics.relativityDate : 11. Apr 2025, 06:00:51
Autres entêtes
Message-ID : <m5rluoFj157U3@mid.individual.net>
References : 1 2 3 4 5
User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
Am Donnerstag000010, 10.04.2025 um 11:13 schrieb J. J. Lodder:
Thomas Heger <ttt_heg@web.de> wrote:
Am Mittwoch000009, 09.04.2025 um 11:04 schrieb J. J. Lodder:
Bertitaylor <bertietaylor@myyahoo.com> wrote:
>
On Mon, 17 Mar 2025 20:38:58 +0000, LaurenceClarkCrossen wrote:
>
The parade was for Weizmann whom the crowd is really looking at.
>
The uncropped photo is given here:
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"The Classical Tests of General Relativity II: Starlight Deflected by
the Sun."
by Brent Shadbolt
>
https://brentshadbolt.substack.com/p/the-classical-tests-of-general-relat
ivity
>
"The cropped photo had misrepresented the event; the crowd were lining
the streets to celebrate the arrival of another Jewish figure arriving
in New York, travelling in a car behind Einstein."
>
Wow the Protestant types absolutely adore Jews. So crucial for their
weltangschaung, what.
>
Nowadays, perhaps.
Before WWII all kinds of christians, catholics and protestants,
were anti-semites, in majority.
The text of "Mein Kampf" on Jews goes straight back to Luther.
>
Luther wasn't a protestant!
>
(Same problem with Mohamed, who wasn't a Muslim and Jesus, who wasn't a
Christian.)
>
Luther was a Catholic!
No longer, at the time when he wrote:
"Von den Juden und ihren Luegen"
Jan
[snip repeats of your history-madness]
Here is a quote from Wikipedia about Martin Luther:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Order_of_Saint_Augustine(this was the order, to which Marin Luther belonged)
Quote:
"The Order of Saint Augustine (Latin: Ordo Fratrum Sancti Augustini), abbreviated OSA, is a mendicant religious order of the Catholic Church. "
Actually he got kicked out of the Catholic church, but still he wasn't 'Evangelisch' after that, because that church didn't exist at that time.
Sure, he had some issues with the pope. But this wouldn't make him an atheist or a protestant.
As far as I can say, Luther remained a true believer of the Catholic faith for all of his life, even after excommunication.
TH